Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Cleveland, OH

Home |  Current Version |  Previous Version |  Text Only |  Print | Product List |  Glossary On
Versions: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50
263
FXUS61 KCLE 192009
AFDCLE

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Cleveland OH
409 PM EDT Sun May 19 2024

.SYNOPSIS...
A cold front approaches from the northwest this evening before
lifting to the north as a warm front on Monday. A stronger cold
front will cross through the region Wednesday night.

&&

.NEAR TERM /THROUGH MONDAY NIGHT/...
A very warm May afternoon with everyone outside of a lake breeze
along the eastern lakeshore surging well into the 80s, with the
Toledo area approaching 90. A weak cold front will approach
Northwest Ohio this evening before lifting well to our north as
a warm front on Monday. Outside of the front itself forcing is
limited, but cumulus are percolating along it from Indiana into
southeast lower Michigan with a few showers / storms attempting
to fire. Expect isolated to scattered activity to fill in and
sag towards the Toledo area this evening before gradually
dissipating between sunset and midnight due to a lack of forcing
and gradual stabilization with the loss of daytime heating. Very
weak shear and forcing preclude any kind of organized severe
weather threat, but steep low-level lapse rates and large DCAPE
do suggest a strong to locally damaging downburst can`t be ruled
out with the strongest cell or two. Greatest concern for a
stronger storm is just northwest of our area, but it`s worth
watching if any stronger storms to drift towards Toledo this
evening. Some guidance tries re-firing a few showers in the
vicinity of North Central Ohio during the pre-dawn Monday,
perhaps as modest warm air advection kicks in and interacts with
any lingering outflow boundaries from this evening`s activity.
Confidence in this scenario is very low so left mentionable POPs
out of the forecast after midnight. The rest of northern OH and
northwestern PA will confidently remain dry tonight with very
patchy river valley fog from eastern OH into western PA.

The Monday and Monday night period will remain very warm and
generally dry beneath strong ridging aloft. Expect plenty of sun
to start the day Monday. Strong heating of a fairly moist
airmass will yield modest to moderate, uncapped CAPE into Monday
afternoon. It`s hard to find much forcing, though the
combination of a lake breeze, a very subtle vort max (evident on
multiple models at 250mb), and modest low-level warm air
advection could be enough for isolated to widely scattered
storms to develop across northern and perhaps western portions
of the forecast area during the afternoon. Have slight chance to
low chance (20-30%) POPs to cover this, highest along and just
inland from the central lakeshore. Like today, shear and forcing
will be quite weak which will generally limit any severe
weather threat if storms can develop Monday. However, the
thermodynamics could still support a couple of stronger
downbursts and perhaps marginal hail with the most intense
cells...most likely with any cells that fire on and get a boost
from the lake breeze. Look for activity to gradually diminish
after sunset Monday night given a general lack of forcing.

Lows tonight will range from the mid to upper 50s in a few
interior valleys from Northeast OH into Northwest PA to the mid
to even upper 60s along and west of I-71. Highs on Monday well
into the 80s, with potential to get close to 90 from Cleveland
west towards Toledo and Findlay, assuming showers / storms don`t
become more widespread than expected. Lows Monday night will
stay in the 60s, with a few spots (such as Cleveland and
Northwest OH) struggling to cool much below 70. It will
certainly feel like summer to start the work week!

&&

.SHORT TERM /TUESDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY NIGHT/...
An active short term period is in store as an upper low moves into
the Great Lakes region Tuesday night into Wednesday. For Tuesday, a
surface boundary will lift across the region accompanied by a weak
upper level shortwave. This will support scattered showers and
isolated thunderstorms across Northern Ohio Tuesday afternoon. By
Wednesday, the surface low will occlude over the Upper Midwest while
its accompanying cold front stalls out in the vicinity of
Illinois/Indiana. As the front remains stalled, robust southerly
flow will continue to fuel a warm and moist airmass characterized by
dewpoints in the lower 60s and temperatures in the upper 80s. The
timing of the frontal passage continues to slow down with the front
not entering western counties until late Wednesday night. Given the
warm and humid airmass in place with MLCAPE values progged between
1500-2000 J/kg accompanied by bulk shear values of 30-35 kts, a
severe weather threat remains on the table for Wednesday. An
inhibiting factor will be cloud debris from earlier convection early
Wednesday which could minimize destabilization across Northern Ohio.

Unseasonably warm temperatures are expected in the short term period
with highs reaching the mid 80s to near 90s degrees on Tuesday.
Still some uncertainty with the precipitation forecast on Tuesday,
but those who remain dry and mainly sunny could flirt with 90
degrees Tuesday afternoon. Warm again on Wednesday ahead of the cold
front passage, though more expansive cloud cover with scattered
showers and storms during the day Wednesday will keep highs closer
to the low to mid 80s. Warm overnight lows on Tuesday night into the
upper 60s to lower 70s turn cooler behind the frontal passage
Wednesday night as they settle in the low 60s.

&&

.LONG TERM /THURSDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/...
Quieter long term period as PoPs exit from west to east behind the
frontal passage Thursday. A ridge of high pressure builds overhead
by Friday and will keep us dry to end the week. Precipitation comes
back into the forecast for next weekend as the previous cold front
lifts back north as a warm front. Near normal temperatures through
the long term in the mid to upper 70s for highs and mid to upper 50s
for lows.

&&

.AVIATION /18Z Sunday THROUGH Friday/...
VFR across the board this afternoon. Scattered thunderstorms
are likely to develop from northeast IN into southeast MI late
this afternoon and will likely sag into Northwest OH this
evening before dissipating. Included a window of VCTS at both
TOL and FDY and took a shot at a brief TEMPO for TSRA at TOL
between 23-1z. Confidence is not especially high but most models
at the least have scattered convection around TOL this evening.
One or two storms near TOL may produce localized gusty winds.

Otherwise, VFR is expected through the TAF period for most.
Patchy fog is possible tonight, mainly in river valleys from
interior eastern OH into PA, and possibly near the lakeshore. No
TAF sites are in prone river valleys so largely left it out,
though hung on to a few hours of MVFR vsby (in mist) at ERI.
Isolated convection is possible Monday afternoon. Coverage
should be limited, but a lake breeze will be a likely focus for
any activity that does develop. Given the lake breeze will be
sitting near or over CLE much of the afternoon, did include a
few hours of VCTS there with this update for their 30 hour TAF.

North-northwest winds of up to 10 knots continue this afternoon.
Winds go light and variable this evening and tonight. South-
southwest winds at 5 to 10 knots develop on Monday, with an
exception of near the eastern lakeshore (including ERI) where a
lake breeze will try to turn winds onshore.

Outlook...Mainly VFR expected outside of any thunderstorms.
Isolated thunderstorms are possible Monday and Tuesday
afternoons. Scattered to numerous thunderstorms are more likely
Wednesday afternoon and evening.

&&

.MARINE...
Quiet conditions continue on Lake Erie to end the weekend and begin
the week as high pressure remains overhead. A warm front will lift
north across the lake Monday and allow for winds to become
southeasterly at 5-10 knots. Low pressure lifts northeastward toward
the Northern Great Lakes Tuesday into Wednesday. This low will drag
a cold front east across the lake Wednesday night into Thursday.
Winds remain generally southerly ahead of the frontal passage but
increase to 10-20 knots during the day Wednesday. Winds then turn
westerly at 10-15 knots behind the front for Thursday.

&&

.CLE WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
OH...None.
PA...None.
NY...None.
MARINE...None.

&&

$$

SYNOPSIS...Sullivan
NEAR TERM...Sullivan
SHORT TERM...Iverson
LONG TERM...Iverson
AVIATION...Sullivan
MARINE...Iverson